Monday, October 1, 2018

Mothering Asheville's Journey to Sustainability

Greetings CHIP Partners! This is Maggie Adams, Project Manager for Mothering Asheville, taking over the IM Blog here for the time being! We are happy to continue to partner with CHIP to continue to battle systemic barriers women in our community face that keep them from having healthy babies. We have a lot going on: so jump right in!

Clinical Shift
  1. Currently working on creating an in-house referral system for women to SistasCaring4Sistas (SC4S)  at MAHEC OB that is easy and becomes a part of OB operations on a consistent in regular basis. Including having process to pull and enter data in EHR (electronic health record) with the help of our MAHEC Admin team!
  2. We are also finishing the final drafts of a referral sheet for referrals for SC4S that come from outside of our clinic
Community Capacity Building
  1. Mother to Mother (M2M) in Pisgah View Apartments continues to meet on the second Thursday of every month from 6 to 7:30 PM. If you have interest in attending, please see Mother to Mother - Request to Join or if you are interested in getting feedback that anything you or your organization are working on with partnership from the participants of M2M fill out : M2M- Request for Meeting Time.
  2. The Back to School Bash, hosted by M2M and Father's Touch was postponed and we are in the process of planning another community event in it's place- please keep your ears and eyes out for more information in upcoming Blog Posts
  3. SC4S is continuing to build skills, training, and capacity with the help of Michele Ashley (Couer Conscious Consulting) and Chama Woydak (Homegrown Babies). They recently have taken on new positions to increase the workload that we are hoping to grow by creating new positions. If you have certain questions regarding SC4S and the particular role they will be serving, feel free to email them directly. 
    1. Cindy McMillan- Director of Education and Training, cindy.mcmillan@mahec.net
    2. Nikita Smart - Director of Operations, nikita.smart@mahec.net
    3. Wakina Norris- Director of Mentoring, wakina.norris@mahec.net
    4. Sade Mustakem- Director of Hospitality, sade.mustakem@mahec.net
Policy and Environmental Change
  1. We have some BIG things going on regarding the possibility of sustaining and creating a pathway for doula reimbursement, to learn more contact Maggie at maggie.adams@mahec.net
Want to get more involved with Mothering Asheville?
  1. Sign up to help us plan our upcoming conference at MAHEC based on the Community Centered Health Model - our first planning meeting will be on October 8, 2018 at 9 AM in the Penland Board Room at MAHEC Education
  2. We need to help restart the Home Visitors Collaborative - with some turnover in the last few months this group has struggled to sustain. We need someone to help lead this initiative and particularly SC4S needs your organizations help in getting referrals! How can we set up a good system?! email Maggie at maggie.adams@mahec.net
  3. Does your organization want to create a way to refer to SC4S, have ideas or need to schedule a meeting to make it easier and to be sure your referrals are being taken. Email Nikita at Nikita.Smart@mahec.net
  4. Visit our Google Drive for meeting notes, resources, and more! Mothering Asheville Google Drive

Friday, July 20, 2018

Building Relationships and Tackling Racism to Support Mothers and Babies



CHIP's involvement in tackling infant mortality continues in Buncombe County, mostly in the partnership and support it provides to Mothering Asheville (previously known as the Community Centered Health Home), a cross-sector collaborative advocating for institutional policies that address structural racism, implicit bias, access to care, and economic and other social factors.
If you want to learn more, please review the Mothering Asheville Implementation Plan, which will also be housed on the Resources & Links tab of this blog.

The next Mothering Asheville Steering Committee Meeting is August 10th from 1:30 -3:00 PM
join the movement!

CHIP is supporting Mothering Asheville's work mostly "behind the scenes" by making sure they and their partners have access to data that can inform their work and helping work out systems for referring to the Sistas Caring for Sistas doula services and integrating those services more fully into MAHEC OB. CHIP is also working to amplify the central message of Mothering Asheville--racism is killing babies in our community and across the country. Yes, racism. Research is clearer every day that the disparities in birth outcomes and infant mortality between blacks and whites cannot just be attributed to economics or education levels or access to health care. Even when all those things are equal, African-American women and infants fare worse than their white counterparts. And women who report higher levels of racial discrimination have worse birth outcomes. Read this excellent article from the New York Times Magazine about race and infant mortality to take a deep dive into this topic.


Recent Mothering Asheville Highlights Include:

  • SistasCaring4Sistas traveled to the DONA International Summit in Fort, Lauderdale Florida to continue professional development as trained doulas, connect with doulas across the country, and learn more about how to develop their work. Nikita Smart and Chama Woydak presented at the conference. 
  • SistasCaring4Sistas has contracted Michele Ashly of Couer Consience Consulting to provide ongoing professional development, organizational development, and sustainability building. 
  • SistasCaring4Sistas at MAHEC has hired two additional Community Based Doulas! Please welcome Chaka Gordon and Latisha Collington!
  • Mother to Mother is planning a community engagement event in partnership with Father’s Touch called Back to School Bash on the afternoon of August 25th (more details to follow)
  • You can also check out the recent media articles about their work, including the work of Sistas Caring 4 Sistas doula program, here and here. However, please note these corrections/ clarifications from Maggie Adams, Project Manager of Mothering Asheville, who wants to make sure this innovative work is represented accurately:
    • Mothering Asheville is a community led collaboration that has existed for over three years and is led by community members, community partner organizations, and healthcare providers. Partners include: Community Residents, Pisgal Legal Services, Children First/CIS, the YWCA of Asheville, Buncombe County Health and Human Services, ABIPA, NC Center for Health and Wellness, Homegrown Babies, Nurse Family Partnership, CHIP, Mission Hospital to name a few. The grant vision, goals, and objectives were written as a collective over a 6 month period. 
    • Mothering Asheville is based off a model designed by the Prevention Institute called the Community Centered Health Home
    • For the first year and a half the initiative was focused on building relationships; mainly through a group called Mother to Mother where community residents and community organizations met monthly. 
    • Out of an event planned by the members of Mother to Mother, the community residents represented in Mother to Mother , after meeting and learning from Chama at Homegrown Babies about what doulas were; decided on that doulas would be a great way to help women with the support needed during pregnancy in birth.
    • After being trained as doulas, the core four, decided to develop SistasCaring4Sistas
    • As a way to be able to support SC4S in being compensated to work with women that might not normally have access to doula care, the doulas were onboarded as MAHEC employees.
    • Amanda and I are not working to address disparities by ourselves, we are only supporting and providing resources ALONGSIDE our partners from what Mother to Mother and SC4S and the Mothering Asheville Steering Committee have led the charge on.
    • We have been on an uphill battle to address many of the institutional policies that prevent women from having healthy pregnancies and it has not been easy and it is hard for healthcare providers to stomach the idea of institutional racism as the reason for health INEQUITIES.
    • Mothering Asheville is not just a community based doula program . SC4S is a community based doula organization
    • Mothering Asheville is a movement that believes that we have to make a clinical shift to address how care is given, community capacity has to be the core focus of the movement, and we have to address policies that are in place that are built off the white supremacy culture that we live in.